Crates.io | ordbog |
lib.rs | ordbog |
version | 0.1.0 |
source | src |
created_at | 2021-06-15 03:19:02.740963 |
updated_at | 2021-06-15 03:19:02.740963 |
description | lossy dictionary codes for accelerated scans |
homepage | |
repository | http://github.com/graydon/ordbog |
max_upload_size | |
id | 410224 |
size | 48,177 |
This is a small crate providing a single special-purpose lossy compresison code, designed for use as a "scan accelerator" for database storage. Such codes are not replacements for underlying values; rather they provide cheap approximate answers to predicates that may be sufficient to elide accessing the underlying data, similar to the way bloom filters can elide lookups, but supporting more general predicates (eg. tabulations, range-queries).
Put another way: rewriting a query on the underlying data values to a query on codes can produce false positives -- requiring a secondary query of the underlying data -- but no false negatives. And for half the codes in a given dictionary (the "exact" codes, assigned to high-frequency inputs), they also do not produce false positives.
The codes are "cheap" (i.e. actually useful for acceleration) for three reasons:
They are small, so conserve memory bandwidth: 1 or 2 bytes per code, vs. 8 bytes for an underlying float/u64 value, or more for a string, high resolution timestamp, uuid or large-decimal type.
They are simple integers, where the underlying data may be something more costly to process.
They are SIMD-friendly: an AVX2 scan can look at 16 or 32 codes at a time, and a GPU scan can look at hundreds at a time.
The crate is equally usable for numeric, textual or categorical data. All it needs is something ordered. It includes wrapper types for floating point.
The codes it produces have the following characteristics:
Each code value is logically 8 or 16 bits (depending on the Mode
enum). The user decides whether to operate with 8 or 16 bits: 8 bit
codes should be used for memory-only scans, to elide 64-byte cache-line
accesses; 16 bit codes should be used for disk scans, to elide 4k page
accesses.
Code value 0 is unused, so that subsequent compression can use it as a sentinel or missing-value code.
All other codes alternate between even/exact (representing a specific value in the input) and odd/inexact (representing an open interval of possible input values). Values 1 and 0xff (or 0xffff, or whatever the final odd code is in the dictionary) thus encode one-sided lower and upper open intervals.
Codes are assigned to cover a sample provided by the user, which is internally sorted and then partitioned into equal-sized bins, including duplicates. Then each run of duplicates within a bin is counted. The sample value with the longest run -- i.e. the highest-frequency sample value -- within each bin is given an (even) exact code. Then an (odd) inexact code is given to each open interval of sample values between sample values that were given exact codes. The provided sample should therefore be big enough to be representative of the total input; but if it is not representative, encoding still works, it just loses efficiency.
The assigned codes imply order and preserve equality, specifically:
code(a) < code(b)
implies a < b
a < b
implies code(a) <= code(b)
a == b
implies code(a) == code(b)
Brian Hentschel, Michael S. Kester, and Stratos Idreos. 2018. Column Sketches: A Scan Accelerator for Rapid and Robust Predicate Evaluation. In Proceedings of the 2018 International Conference on Management of Data (SIGMOD '18). Association for Computing Machinery, New York, NY, USA, 857–872.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1145/3183713.3196911
https://stratos.seas.harvard.edu/files/stratos/files/sketches.pdf
Wikitionary (Danish):
Noun: ordbog (singular definite ordbogen, plural indefinite ordbøger)
- dictionary, lexicon
Etymology: From ord ("word") + bog ("book"). Compare Swedish ordbok, English wordbook, German Wörterbuch.
License: MIT OR Apache-2.0